How do you fit in the ideal amounts of cardio, strength training, stretching, balance exercises, and core training—without living in the gym? Well, you could do multiple workouts a day: cardio in the morning, Pilates at night. Strength training the next day and a yoga workout before bed. Or you could do one long workout per day, such as 30 minutes on the elliptical followed by 30 minutes of full-body weight training (stretching each time, of course). While both of these options will work, they also take a whole lot of time. And when "lack of time" is No. 1 on the list of excuses people cite for not exercising, I'll give you one guess how far longer, more frequent workouts will get you. How about we all start working out smarter instead of harder? When you combine the right elements of cardio, strength-training and flexibility into a single workout, you're in and out of the gym in half the time—and still getting the results you crave. Think Intensity!Get more from your cardio workouts in less time by upping the intensity. As long as you have a solid base of fitness (you've been consistently exercising at a moderate aerobic level for a few several months), and you don't have any other restrictions that would require you to limit your intensity, you can start exercising harder (think: 80-85 percent of your max heart rate) for a shorter workout and get the same calorie-burning and health-boosting benefits in less time. Why go easy for an hour when you can pump up the workload and finish in half the time? Here are a few examples (based on a 150-pound woman):
Use Smart Strength-Training CombosInstead of doing basic isolation moves, come up with creative ways to combine upper body and lower body toning exercises into a single move. So instead of standing still while doing an upper body exercise like a biceps curl, lateral raise or overhead press, think of ways you can combine that movement with a lower body action (think lunges, squats and bridges) simultaneously. So maybe you lunge while doing lateral raises, squat then push into an overhead press, or lie down to perform bridges while doing a chest press. Combining upper body and lower body training like this has four major benefits:
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